Under California Civil Code §1950.5, here is what is legal and what is not -- and how to dispute wrongful charges in Los Angeles.
Check My Los Angeles DepositLos Angeles has additional local tenant protections beyond California state law. These may provide extra grounds to dispute this charge.
The Short Answer
State Law
Cleaning deductions are legitimate in California when a unit is left in genuinely dirty condition, beyond what normal cleaning between tenants would require. However, landlords sometimes use vague cleaning charges as a catch-all. California law requires that deductions be specific and itemized. A charge like "cleaning: $350" without a breakdown is often challenged successfully. You should not be charged for cleaning that reflects normal use. Wiping down appliances, vacuuming, and general tidying that any landlord would do between tenants are not chargeable.
Practical Tip
Leave the unit as clean as you found it. Take photos of every room including inside appliances before handing over keys. If you receive a cleaning charge, request receipts; a professional cleaning invoice should itemize services performed.
Los Angeles Local Protection
Los Angeles's Los Angeles Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO) may provide additional tenant protections beyond California state law when disputing cleaning fees charges. See full local ordinance details for Los Angeles.
Step-by-Step
Review your lease for any cleaning fees clauses
Check whether your lease contains any specific provisions about cleaning fees responsibilities. Some leases include language about repainting or professional cleaning obligations. If the lease does not explicitly assign this cost to you, or if the clause conflicts with California law, it may not be enforceable.
Compare your move-in and move-out documentation
Gather your move-in checklist, any photos or videos taken at move-in, and your move-out documentation. If the cleaning fees condition was already present when you moved in, or if there is no meaningful difference between then and now, that is strong evidence the charge is improper.
Calculate legitimate vs. illegitimate portions
Even if some portion of the charge is valid, your landlord may be overcharging. Request itemized receipts showing exactly what was done and the cost. Vague charges like "Cleaning Fees fee: $400" without a breakdown are often successfully disputed.
Send a written dispute letter citing California Civil Code §1950.5
Write a formal demand letter to your landlord citing California Civil Code §1950.5 and identifying the specific deduction you are disputing. State the amount you believe was improperly withheld and request its return within a reasonable timeframe. Note the 21-day deadline under California law and the penalties that apply for non-compliance.
File in California small claims court if needed
If your landlord ignores or rejects your dispute, California small claims court handles deposit cases up to $12,500 -- no attorney required. Filing fees are typically under $100, and judges regularly rule in tenants' favor on clear-cut improper deductions. Bring your demand letter, receipts, and photos as evidence.
Common Questions
It depends on the circumstances. Under California Civil Code §1950.5, California landlords may charge for cleaning fees in certain situations, but the charge must be tied to actual, documented damage beyond normal wear and tear. Routine or excessive cleaning fees charges without proper documentation can be disputed.
Under California Civil Code §1950.5, your California landlord has 21 days after your move-out date to return your security deposit along with an itemized written statement of any deductions. Note: Los Angeles Rent Stabilization Ordinance (RSO) may impose a stricter deadline for Los Angeles properties.
If your landlord improperly deducted for cleaning fees, you may be entitled to up to 3x the amount wrongfully withheld under California Civil Code §1950.5. Start by sending a formal written demand letter citing California Civil Code §1950.5. If your landlord does not respond, you can file in California small claims court (limit: $12,500) without needing an attorney.
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